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politicus
01-10-2008, 02:09 AM
Romney Pulls Ads in South Carolina, Florida


BOSTON (AP) - Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has decided to pull his advertising from South Carolina, where he was hoping to take on Mike Huckabee and John McCain, and from Florida, where Rudy Giuliani has been spending time and money.
"We feel the best strategy is to focus our paid messaging in Michigan," Romney spokesman Kevin Madden said Wednesday.

The decision comes on the heels of back-to-back second-place finishes in Iowa and New Hampshire for the former Massachusetts governor. Romney, a multimillionaire who had used some of his own cash, had invested heavily in both states, counting on the two to give him the momentum toward the nomination.

Earlier on Wednesday, Romney had assured his top financial backers that he will win the upcoming Michigan primary, as he and his staff worked to soothe supporters unsettled by his losses in the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary.

"It's just getting started," the presidential contender told hundreds of supporters gathered at a convention center for a followup to the "National Call Day" that raised an unprecedented $6.5 million a year ago

He promised to carry on to Michigan, which votes Jan. 15, as well as Nevada and South Carolina, which vote Jan. 19.

The public spectacle, a rarity for the normally tightly controlled Romney political operation, included appeals for calm from a top financial backer, eBay CEO Meg Whitman, and a top political supporter, former Sen. Jim Talent of Missouri.

"To a person, we remain incredibly optimistic that we still have a chance to win this thing," Whitman told the crowd, which included everyone from Fortune 500 executives to entrepreneurs.

Spencer Zwick, Romney's national finance director, told the phone bankers: "If for some reason he is not the nominee, all those funds will be returned to the donor himself."

___

Associated Press Writer Jim Kuhnhenn reported from South Carolina


I really thought that Romney would be in it longer, but maybe he's tired of spending his millions on second place.

Maybe he'll follow Thompson and Giuliani out leaving a three-way race: Paul, Huckabee and McCain.

wildflower
01-10-2008, 02:12 AM
I really thought that Romney would be in it longer, but maybe he's tired of spending his millions on second place.

Maybe he'll follow Thompson and Giuliani out leaving a three-way race: Paul, Huckabee and McCain.

It doesn't say he's leaving the race, it just says he's pulling his ads from SC and focusing on other places.

You really think money-bags is going to quit so early? Come on.

MayTheRonBeWithYou
01-10-2008, 02:13 AM
He is staking everything on Michigan.

Mitt would have been a decent candidate if he had not tried to fool people into thinking he is a hardcore Republican right winger. If he stuck to his pro choice platform and focused on economic issues, he might have won.

austin356
01-10-2008, 02:15 AM
Romney is not leaving. Romney is concentrating support.

When you spread your resources too thin you compete in all battles, but lose all. If you congregate all your resources in confined areas you dont compete in all battles, but you win some. Romney needs A win, if he wants to win on the 5th.

pacelli
01-10-2008, 02:17 AM
Mitt is a fighter, but only when it serves his own best interest. I'm not sure that he will officially drop out if he doesn't place first in Michigan, as I think he is too proud to formally drop out.

He is probably viewing it as a cost-benefit issue-- because in the end, he gets his money back. If he spends much more & doesn't get the voter return, he'll stop spending money.

slowmotionjones
01-10-2008, 02:20 AM
We are winning.

Please pledge your support at

http://www.freeatlast2008.com/

PimpBlimp
01-10-2008, 02:23 AM
Romney is cutting loses. Remember is paying for this stuff out of pockets. He did the math and its no longer as profitable for him to be investing so much.

slowmotionjones
01-10-2008, 02:24 AM
Romney is not leaving. Romney is concentrating support.

When you spread your resources too thin you compete in all battles, but lose all. If you congregate all your resources in confined areas you dont compete in all battles, but you win some. Romney needs A win, if he wants to win on the 5th.

Mitt spend $15 million! on Iowa and NH. No amount of money will get him the support he needs.

austin356
01-10-2008, 02:26 AM
Mitt spend $15 million! on Iowa and NH. No amount of money will get him the support he needs.


Yea someone said "the more Mitt spends, and the more voters hear from him, the less they like him".

Jobarra
01-10-2008, 02:30 AM
This is why we need to crush him and McCain in Michigan. We can do it if we target Democrats as well as Independents and Republicans. I would hope we spend more money in Michigan than in Iowa, N.H., and S.C. combined. I would like to wait for the Feb 5th strategy to kick in, but I'm getting worried about the "He can't win" sentiment. Easy to roll back that argument with one state under your belt. The sooner it can be done, the easier it would be to grab voters. If it happens in Maine, we only have 2 days to grab voters.

1st in Michigan =
Romney suffering a third stunning loss, a loss to an unelectable candidate in his hometown.
A slight bump in later states
Easier to get voters

Unfortunately, its probably way too late to actually get any media out there :(

pacelli
01-10-2008, 02:38 AM
Yea someone said "the more Mitt spends, and the more voters hear from him, the less they like him".

LOL that is good :)

slowmotionjones
01-10-2008, 02:40 AM
...

Energy
01-10-2008, 02:52 AM
Yea someone said "the more Mitt spends, and the more voters hear from him, the less they like him".

Make it backfire on him for using his own millions and corporate money:

Good theme for a grassroots "attack" flyer/ad pointing out the millions Mitt is spending from his pocket (and corporate money) and how in a way he's trying to buying votes.

"Can your vote be bought?"

"Can one make up shortcomings with dollars?"

"Can shortcomings be covered up with dollars?"

"Should the election be about who can spend the most?"

manny
01-10-2008, 04:08 AM
Yea someone said "the more Mitt spends, and the more voters hear from him, the less they like him".

lol

jd603
01-10-2008, 02:06 PM
Maybe because he bought a slot on the Diebold machines already? It's another state with old Diebold.


Romney Pulls Ads in South Carolina, Florida


BOSTON (AP) - Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has decided to pull his advertising from South Carolina, where he was hoping to take on Mike Huckabee and John McCain, and from Florida, where Rudy Giuliani has been spending time and money.
"We feel the best strategy is to focus our paid messaging in Michigan," Romney spokesman Kevin Madden said Wednesday.

The decision comes on the heels of back-to-back second-place finishes in Iowa and New Hampshire for the former Massachusetts governor. Romney, a multimillionaire who had used some of his own cash, had invested heavily in both states, counting on the two to give him the momentum toward the nomination.

Earlier on Wednesday, Romney had assured his top financial backers that he will win the upcoming Michigan primary, as he and his staff worked to soothe supporters unsettled by his losses in the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary.

"It's just getting started," the presidential contender told hundreds of supporters gathered at a convention center for a followup to the "National Call Day" that raised an unprecedented $6.5 million a year ago

He promised to carry on to Michigan, which votes Jan. 15, as well as Nevada and South Carolina, which vote Jan. 19.

The public spectacle, a rarity for the normally tightly controlled Romney political operation, included appeals for calm from a top financial backer, eBay CEO Meg Whitman, and a top political supporter, former Sen. Jim Talent of Missouri.

"To a person, we remain incredibly optimistic that we still have a chance to win this thing," Whitman told the crowd, which included everyone from Fortune 500 executives to entrepreneurs.

Spencer Zwick, Romney's national finance director, told the phone bankers: "If for some reason he is not the nominee, all those funds will be returned to the donor himself."

___

Associated Press Writer Jim Kuhnhenn reported from South Carolina


I really thought that Romney would be in it longer, but maybe he's tired of spending his millions on second place.

Maybe he'll follow Thompson and Giuliani out leaving a three-way race: Paul, Huckabee and McCain.